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2026 FIFA World Cup
22MAR

Azteca reopens before 84,130 fans

2 min read
05:50UTC

The stadium owner said he was not sure the renovation would be finished. It was. Mexico's fortress drew 0-0 with Portugal to prove it.

SportAssessed
Key takeaway

Azteca's on-schedule reopening removes the principal infrastructure risk for the tournament's opening weekend.

Estadio Azteca reopened on 28 March with a Mexico 0-0 Portugal friendly before 84,130 spectators. 1 The renovation that owner Emilio Azcárraga was "not sure" would be finished on time is done. The audio and video systems that passed testing on 23 March held up at match scale without fault. 2

The venue now carries three names at once. Commercially it is Estadio Banorte, under a sponsorship deal running to 2037. FIFA mandates it operate as Estadio Ciudad de Mexico during the tournament. Locals still call it El Coloso de Santa Ursula. 3 The Neighbourhood Assembly Against Megaprojects protested outside over water scarcity and the privatisation of community space, though the demonstration did not disrupt proceedings. A near-capacity crowd for a non-competitive fixture suggests tournament demand will overwhelm supply; the cheapest official final ticket is already listed at $4,185 .

Cristiano Ronaldo was absent from the Portugal squad, resting a muscle strain sustained on 28 February playing for Al Nassr. 4 Portugal dominated possession but created little, with Goncalo Ramos hitting the post. Israel Reyes earned man of the match as Mexico recorded their 10th clean sheet in 15 matches. At 41, Ronaldo's World Cup fitness has shifted from certainty to open question.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Estadio Azteca is football's most famous ground. Diego Maradona's 'Hand of God' goal and the 1970 and 1986 World Cup finals all happened here. It was in the middle of a major renovation and there were serious doubts it would be ready in time for the 2026 tournament. The reopening on 28 March confirms it will be. It will host the first match of the entire tournament on 11 June (Mexico vs South Africa). Nearly 85,000 people attended a friendly match on Saturday as a test run, and everything worked. The biggest infrastructure worry for the World Cup has been resolved.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Azteca's renovation was driven by Copa America 2024 pitch failures and FIFA's mandate to modernise Mexican venues to meet 2026 standards. The stadium had operated without major structural renovation since 1986, making the compressed 2024-26 window unusually demanding.

Mexico City's altitude (2,240 metres) creates specific pitch maintenance challenges that drove the choice of specialised grass blend and underground ventilation, adding cost and timeline risk to the project.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    FIFA takes full possession of the stadium in early May, giving organisers six weeks to complete final preparations before the opening match.

  • Risk

    Community protests over water use and privatisation of public space could escalate as the tournament approaches, creating reputational pressure on FIFA.

First Reported In

Update #3 · USA beaten 5-2 at World Cup host venue

ESPN· 29 Mar 2026
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